Here is a list of the requirements for the hosting I am looking for for our project. This is still evolving and is predicated on many factor that can't be easily predicted at this point. But I've tried to error on the side of caution (requesting more resources than necessary at this point).

I have a couple projects about ready to launch. I've been running the alpha versions on development servers but I want to roll out the beta versions on the actual servers that will be hosting them.

Finding a web host reminds me of finding a cell phone provider -- except 1000x worse. I've been trolling the forums on webhostingtalk.com for the last few months. So many choices. So many baseless accusations. So many vague endorsements. And so many other sites out there fluffing recommendations to the top bidder.

I posted my first thread on webhostingtalk.com outlining my goals this weekend. The responses, while not unencouraging, are typical of the kind of generic responses typical of the forums. I suspect a certain number of responses are from people just wishing to boost their per-post account status and get eyeball on the service they're promoting in their signature. This is not to say the forums haven't been helpful -- they're the best thing I've found out. But not the kinda clean organized breakdown that I've been looking for. What I really want is something like:

I'm in the process of narrowing down my options to a short list of 5-6 companies and drafting an email to them based on this questionnaire at whreviews.com introducing myself and what I'm looking for. I plan to document my efforts here and on the webhostingtalk.com site in the coming days.

I hope in the end to find a reliable host or hosts for my project whom I can freely recommend to others.

note: the code examples below do not reproduce the problem. For code that does reproduce it, see this post

This drives me crazy. Until it was fixed in PHP 5 (or a late version of PHP 4), PHP had a problematic namespace conflict involving associative arrays that shared their key names with other variables or arrays.

That summarizes it. I don't know if that will actually cause the error, or if it requires some other factor. But it's a variation on this theme and I'm always running into this problem because I like to do neat-freakish things like use consistent key names for related arrays. For instance, the code I was working on today:

What's even more maddening for me is that the problem doesn't occur in PHP 5, which I have on my local development server. So I won't run into the problem until I load it up to one of my remote host servers still running PHP 4.

I did come up a solution for a project today that was rather far along in development and I didn't have time to more fully refactor. It uses the serialize function.

The problem was that some session variables that I was depending on to be present after a form got submitted were being overwritten. So I serialized the session array, stuffed it in a hidden form tag and unserialized it on the next page.

This worked for me. Probably not the most secure technique, but this wasn't especially sensitive data. I'm hoping it's a somewhat unique situation that won't have to be repeated ad infinitum. A better solution -- only sign up with hosts using PHP 5!

Impressed by both. Actually preferred Linda Cropp's, though Adrian Fenty won the primary 57% to 31%.

Incidentally, I''m currently reading Malcolm Gladwell's Blink and it looks like "youth and vigor" (with a dash of masculinity) and the image thereof played a major part in this campaign. Although not necessarily an error in this case (I probably would have voted for Fenty, too), you could probably cite this as a textbook example of the "Warren G. Harding Error". Or, perhaps more aptly now, the "George W. Bush Error".

Been working on my wikipedia swatch for the CSS Swatches project, but I've discovered that wikimedia's parser doesn't like inline background-image settings. So here's the wikipedia swatch as it would appear with the inline background-image settings rendering correctly:

Recently heard a story on public radio about Wikia -- the commercial cousin of Wikipedia. I really like the mediawiki software and was interested in starting a wiki for my moshi project, which I did, sort of. But you have to apply to start your own wiki and my moshi idea was sent back to the drawing board and eventually ended up being the css wikia: